Battle of Kohima

cancel2 2022

Canceled
This is a battle that's not very known in Britain let alone the US, which is very sad because it is one of the defining battles of WW2 in the Far East. It stopped the Japanese advance into India from Burma.

In this remote Indian village near the border with Burma, a tiny force of British and Indian troops faced the might of the Imperial Japanese Army. Outnumbered ten to one, the defenders fought the Japanese hand to hand in a battle that was amongst the most savage in modern warfare.

A garrison of no more than 3,500 fighting men, desperately short of water and with the wounded compelled to lie in the open, faced a force of 15,000 Japanese. They held the pass and prevented a Japanese victory that would have proved disastrous for the British. Another six weeks of bitter fighting followed as British and Indian reinforcements strove to drive the enemy out of India. When the battle was over, a Japanese army that had invaded India on a mission of imperial conquest had suffered the worst defeat in its history. Thousands of men lay dead on a devastated landscape, while tens of thousands more Japanese starved in a catastrophic retreat eastwards. They called the journey back to Burma the ‘Road of Bones’, as friends and comrades committed suicide or dropped dead from hunger along the jungle paths.

http://www.britain-at-war.org.uk/html/body_stand_at_kohima.htm
 
It's one of those things that gets overlooked because it's colonial forces. I mean, I rarely hear about ANZACs from any Brit.
 
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